In his third title defense, England's DeGale and fellow world titleholder Badou Jack finally met in their much-anticipated unification fight on Jan. 14 in Brooklyn, New York. They put on a tremendous battle in which both men got knocked down -- Jack in the first round and DeGale in the 12th -- but it a was razor close fight all the way, and the judges' declared it a majority draw, allowing both to retain their titles. As appealing as a rematch would be it is unlikely because Jack is moving up in weight, leaving DeGale, who has had each of his title fights in North America, looking forward to finally returning home to make a defense but will be out until late 2017 because of shoulder surgery.Next: TBA

2. Gilberto Ramirez (36-0)
Ramirez got his mandatory world title shot against Arthur Abraham in April 2016 on the Manny Pacquiao-Timothy Bradley Jr. III undercard and totally dominated Abraham, winning 120-108 on all three scorecards to become the first Mexican fighter to win a super middleweight world title and only the second to win a world title above middleweight. A torn tendon in the middle finger of his right hand kept him out for the rest of 2016, but he returned April 22 and shut out Ukraine's Max Bursak in his first defense, a snoozer he won 120-106 on all three scorecards. He made defense No. 2 against Jesse Hart (22-0) on a Top Rank ESPN card on Sept. 22 and won a close decision in a fantastic action fight.Next: TBA

3. Anthony Dirrell (30-1-1)
Since losing his world title to Badou Jack in his first defense in April 2015, Dirrell has only fought three times, most recently a one-sided fourth-round knockout of Norbert Nemesapati in January. He will return to headline a Fox Sports 1 card in his hometown of Flint, Michigan, against Denis Douglin (20-5).Next: Nov. 17 vs. Douglin

4. George Groves (26-3)
After losing three world title fights, two by knockout to British countryman Carl Froch, Groves got another opportunity against former titlist Fedor Chudinov, of Russia, for a vacant title on May 27 and finally got over the hump and claimed that elusive belt by stopping Chudinov in the sixth round of an entertaining fight. Even Froch, who was ringside, stood and applauded Groves. Groves' next move was to enter the eight-man World Boxing Super Series tournament. He was awarded the top seed and will face countryman Jamie Cox (23-0) in the quarterfinals in London.Next: Oct. 14 vs. Cox

5. Callum Smith (23-0)
England's Smith was supposed to get a mandatory title shot against the winner of the Jan. 14 title unification bout between Badou Jack and James DeGale, but the fight was ruled a draw and Jack vacated the belt Smith was mandatory for. So Smith was then supposed to face former titlist Anthony Dirrell for the vacant title this fall, but constant issues getting a deal done led Smith to walk away from the fight and instead join the World Boxing Super Series. He was awarded the No. 2 seed and won a unanimous decision against Sweden's Erik Skoglund, whom he dropped in the 11th round, in the quarterfinals on Sept. 16. He'll face the Juergen Braehmer-Rob Brant winner in the semifinals in early 2018.Next: TBA

6. Chris Eubank Jr. (26-1)
In his second fight since moving up from middleweight, England's Eubank Jr., son of the former two-division world titleholder, rolled to a one-sided decision victory -- 120-108, 118-110, 118-110 -- against former middleweight and super middleweight titleholder Arthur Abraham on July 15. With the win, Eubank earned the final slot in the World Boxing Super Series and, in his quarterfinal bout in Germany on Oct. 7, destroyed Turkey's Avni Yildirim via third-round knockout. Eubank will move on to the semifinals in early 2018 to face the George Groves-Jamie Cox winner.Next: TBA

7. Andre Dirrell (26-2)
The 2004 U.S. Olympic bronze medalist, who was 0-2 in world title bouts, claimed a vacant interim belt in dubious fashion on May 20 against Jose Uzcategui. It had been a tough and competitive fight but Dirrell was behind on two scorecards and even on the third when he got knocked out at the end of the eighth round with a three-punch combination. However, referee Bill Clancy ruled the final shot came after the bell and disqualified Uzcategui, giving Dirrell the win and putting him in position to face full titleholder James DeGale when he returns from injury. However, because of the controversial DQ call, the sanctioning body has ordered an immediate rematch.Next: TBA

8. Jose Uzcategui (26-2)
Uzcategui, of Venezuela, was riding a four-fight winning streak when he met Andre Dirrell for a vacant interim belt on May 20 and suffered a controversial loss. Uzcategui was ahead on two of three scorecards and even on the third when he knocked Dirrell out at the bell ending the eighth round. However, referee Bill Clancy ruled the last shot came after the bell and disqualified Uzcategui. At worst the call should have been an accidental foul and the fight should have gone to the scorecards for a technical decision. Uzcategui fought a terrific fight and did not fire the final punch on purpose. He was in mid-combination at the bell. A rematch has been ordered.Next: TBA

9. Tyron Zeuge (21-0-1)
Germany's Zeuge fought to a majority draw with titleholder Giovanni De Carolis in July 2016 but in the rematch in November, Zeuge scored a 12th-round knockout in an action-packed fight to win the belt. In his first defense, on March 25, Zeuge retained the title against Nigeria's Isaac Ekpo, the mandatory challenger, by fifth-round technical decision after suffering a bad cut on an accidental head butt. A rematch was ordered but Zeuge got an exception to face wildly undeserving England's Paul Smith, whom he beat easily, 119-108 on all three scorecards, on June 17. Next up will be the rematch with Ekpo (31-3) in November.Next: TBA vs. Ekpo

10. David Benavidez (19-0)
Benavidez was very impressive in May when he easily dismantled former world title challenger Rogelio "Porky" Media in an eighth-round knockout victory in a title eliminator. He got the title shot on Sept. 8 when he battled hard against Ronald Gavril in a fight of the year contender. Benavidez survived a 12th-round knockdown to win a split decision and a vacant world title. At age 20, Benavidez became the youngest active titleholder in boxing and the youngest in super middleweight division history. A rematch with Gavril (18-2) is likely to be his next fight.Next: TBA